Findymail's whole pitch is that you only pay for data you can use. Credits are spent on verified results, bounces over 5% get refunded, and unused credits roll over. That is a buyer-friendly model in a category full of stale-database providers. This guide breaks down Findymail pricing in 2026, how the finder and verifier credits work, what phone numbers actually cost, and where the per-email math lands.
Findymail runs on credits with a verified-only billing rule that defines the model:
- You only pay for verified results. If Findymail cannot find or verify a contact, no credit is spent. This is the core of the pricing.
- 1 email = 1 credit, 1 phone = 10 credits. Emails are the cheap unit; phone numbers cost ten times as much and are available for non-EU contacts only.
- Two credit types. Finder credits find and auto-verify new contacts. Verifier credits (included as a bonus, e.g. 5,000 with the Starter plan) let you verify lists from other sources. Findymail contacts are already verified, so verifier credits are extra value for cleaning external data.
- Volume slider pricing. Cost scales with monthly volume, from 1,000 up to 100,000+ contacts, with the per-credit rate falling as volume rises. The published anchor is the $99 Starter plan at 5,000 Finder credits.
Two more rules tilt the model toward the buyer: unused credits roll over up to 2x your monthly allowance (no strict use-it-or-lose-it), and duplicates found within 30 days are not charged again.

